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19th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management (SSDBM 2007)
What Constitutes a Scientific Database?
Banff, Alberta, Canada
July 09-July 11
ISBN: 0-7695-2868-6
John L. Pfaltz, Univ. of Virginia, USA
We propose that a scientific database should be inherently different from, say a business database. The difference is based on the nature of science itself, in which hypotheses, or logical implications, form an essential part of the discipline. Empirical observations give rise to tentative hypotheses. Individual hypotheses are then tested, refuted or refined, by further empirical observation.

In the paper, we propose representing the observational data of science in a lattice format that also conveys all the logical implications that can be supported by those observations. We claim that such a structure can be incrementally created and that the hypotheses formed will adapt to new data. We demonstrate its practicality by presenting two real situations in which it has been used.

Finally, we look at the rather considerable storage costs associated with this approach and discuss other limitations that are still unresolved in this new approach to the representation of scientific data.

Citation:
John L. Pfaltz, "What Constitutes a Scientific Database?," ssdbm, pp.2, 19th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management (SSDBM 2007), 2007
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